Childbirth is a beautiful thing — bringing life into the world, and all that — but it’s also scary as heck and pretty gross. Combine that with the dark arts, as Grady Hendrix does in “Witchcraft for Wayward Girls,” and you’ve got the makings of a fantastic body horror novel.
Actually, it’s so much more than that. Hendrix is a wizard at mixing together tropes of terror in thought-provoking ways — with no small amount of humor thrown in — that always exceed the sum of their parts.
2014’s “Horrorstör,” for instance, takes an Ikea clone called ORSK and a handful of employees who spend the night in the furniture superstore, inconveniently built on the site of a notorious prison, and spins it into a brutal haunting that has a lot to say about menial labor and what it does to workers.
In 2016’s “My Best Friend’s Exorcism,” Hendrix combines 1980s satanic panic with friendships among teen girls, possession and the best ever casting-out-of-a-demon scene that includes the lyrics of the Go-Go’s “We Got the Beat.”
And 2020’s “The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires” follows a housewife as she discovers her worth when she goes toe-to-toe with a bloodsucker only she has been able to suss out in her Charleston neighborhood. Not to mention the haunted puppets of 2022’s “How to Sell a Haunted House,” which underscore the horror created by a family’s inability to communicate.
There are even more examples, but you get the idea: Hendrix is interested in scaring the pants off readers but also digging a little deeper into what the scares — and the pants, for that matter — might mean. That he often does so from the perspective of female protagonists is even more intriguing.
In “Witchcraft for Wayward Girls,” Hendrix leans into the trauma of being an unwed teen mother in 1970 — and 15-year-old Neva is living it. Her family is horrified, as any “respectable” family would have been at the time, and as a result Neva’s dad takes her on a long drive across state lines:
“’What’s happening, Dad?’ she asked, and she couldn’t help it, she was so scared. ‘Why are we in Florida?’